Sunday, 7 October 2018

An Exodus from Burma



I have heard from my parents, stories about people who had returned to India from Burma, crossing rivers and mountains and jungles during the Second World War. A brother of my mother’s father returned leaving everything behind. We were young children that time and used to gawk at the stories of these people escaping horrors. On the way they saw gold, jewels and other valuables lying around but no one was really interested to picking these up, for everyone was trying to save his or her own life, throwing away personal and valuable things, to lighten their burden, just like sailors in a marooned ship would lighten it by throwing things out, including the sacks of food grains. Many perished along the way, the few lucky ones who survived the ordeal to reach the Indian borders had to start all over again from a scratch. 

It was a tragedy of epic proportions, a people caught in the midst of fighting and enmity, obsession to hold more land under control and the power that will flow to them from the control of resources. But very few written record of this human tragedy exists. I recently came across an Assamese book translated into English. The Assamese author is Debendranath Acharya (died in 1981), translated by Amit R. Baishya and published in 2018,[1] a remarkable account of thousands of ordinary people fleeing under extreme sufferings.

Around 450,000 to 500,000 Burmese Indians walked to British India fleeing the advancing Japanese troops and to escape the rising anti-Indian feelings among Burmese nationals. The Indians from the subcontinent had gone over to Burma after it was incorporated into British India in 1885. A lot of Indians migrated to Burma in search of employment, many as indentured laborers and were quite poor. There were poor farmers, laborers and petty traders who settled in Burma.

Chettiar money lenders from Tamil Nadu also had settled there in search of riches. They had grabbed control over some 3 million acres of paddy fields in the lowlands of Irrawaddy River. This had created hatred for Indian banyas and when the opportunity presented, they spewed hatred and vengeance on all people from India. All these impelled the Indian settlers to flee Burma despite living there for generations. Some 50,000 people would die during the journey.

The rich and the powerful escaped via air or sea, but the poor and the ordinary had to walk it through Arakan range of mountains to Chitttagong or through Chindwin valley into Manipur or through the hilly passes of Hukawng valley into Lekhapani (Ledo) in Assam. This book, Jangam which means “The Movement,” describes the ordeal along the third route.

During times of peace Indian settlers and Burmese stayed in villages peacefully and in relative bliss. A peasant Ramgobinda and his family consisting of his mother, wife and a 7 year old boy were living rather peacefully in a village Manku. His wife was seven months pregnant and a little parcel of land which he owned, he tilled and eked out his living. But when the troubles broke out, along with the advancing Japanese troops, atrocities committed against the Indian-Burmese started to increase day by day. The Burmese’s goal was to drive foreigners away from Burma and to rebuild Burma. This small family leaves with a few others and they start on their long march to their motherland, which they had not seen in a few generations.

Ramgobinda’s mother dies on the way; his second son is born in the midst of the jungle and along with his mother was put in a jeep that came along with British military official for emergency medical treatment. The father and the elder son continued their journey on foot. The father ends up carrying the son on his back most of the journey. They discard all valuables on the way to lighten their load, the only load they could carry was their own bodies. Saving themselves with their ‘life’ intact was the only thing that mattered. It was the stubborn will of human survival that carried the survivors through. 

The way was treacherous, red clay soil, which deteriorated with the onset of monsoon, when people sank up to their thighs in the mud. The sultry heat was unbearable. Leech bites, dysentery, malaria plagued them even as they walked. Many just lay down and died, they could not be buried even. The escape route was strewn with corpses. A poignant one was of a mother and infant frozen in the act of suckling the baby. No animals or vultures were there to greet them or pick their bones of the dead clean. But scores of beautiful butterflies covered the dead bodies, feasting off the juices oozing out of these decaying bodies.

Once what they brought from home was finished, they ate what was available on the way, bamboo shoots, leaves and fruits of wild banana trees. They kept walking pushing themselves to the utmost of human endurance for to stop would mean death. Their feet became swollen and blood oozed out. With some more loss of life the small group reaches the refugee camp after some 25 days’ walk. They were skin and bones when they arrived. The husband and wife do meet in the end, but unfortunately both had lost their minds in the ordeal and anxiety and had become insane and couldn’t recognize each other. The little boy and the small baby of 21 days survive, but are being taken care by others, who had walked along with them in the journey.

These tragic tales of human beings push us to wonder why do men do this to each other. The same country which goes by the name Myanmar now, has thrust out some 500,000 Rohingya people of Muslim faith, from their country as refugees. They were driven off because they were not recognized as citizens of Myanmar. These unfortunate people are living in Cox Bazaar in Bangladesh in refugee camps in untold misery. They have been driven away, with no place to go, no citizenship and no identity, another human tragedy of recent times.[2] It is tantamount to genocide.

Where is the world going? Where is compassion and love for the sufferings for others, which almost all religions teach? How can one set of human beings inflict such pain on another set of humans? Have they no compunction left in their hearts? Is there no fear of God in the breasts of the people who commit such atrocities? Don’t we realize that one day we will have to stand before the Judge of the whole earth and give an account of all the wrongs we have done in this life?

All that people like us can do sitting far away from the scene of such actions is to pray for these displaced people, who suffer so much for no fault of theirs, so that God would strengthen them through their trials and tribulations, and for the authorities and powers that be, to wake up to such human tragedies and desist from such actions and provide succor to these suffering people.
God be with them all.


[1] Debenranath Acharya, Jangam: A Forgotten Exodus in which Thousand Died, trans. by Amit R. Baishya, Vitasta Publishing Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi: India, 2018
[2] I have written about the Rohingya refugees in an earlier blog, The Fate of Rohingyas, dated 27.2.2018, which gives an account of their tragic story.

Sunday, 9 September 2018

The Portrait that kept the conscience



It is very strange that a portrait should be the conscience-keeper of a person. Anything wrong that person committed it showed on the portrait, but not on the person. He remained unblemished for his portrait took the beatings of not only his sinful actions but also the ravages of age on his face and body. Wouldn’t that be nice? That you are not touched by the anger and jealousy and murderous thoughts and also debauchery that one can indulge in and still it leaves no traces on your face! The lines of sneer and scorn of the heart and wrinkles of age did not leave a mark on the face!

I have heard about King Yayati in Hindu Mythology who cursed with premature old age, wanting to enjoy youthful days for some more years, asked his sons to transfer their youthfulness to him, and one of the sons, Puru obliges him. After having enjoyed the passions of the senses for a long time, he finally realizes the futility of all these and transfers the youthfulness back to his son, makes him the rightful heir and retires to the forest to become an ascetic. Dorian Grey seems to have exchanged this youthfulness with his portrait and indulged in the passions of his flesh, but only to come to a tragic end.

That is the amazing story of Dorian Grey written by Oscar Wilde,[1] the famous 19th century English writer. His only novel, this was published in 1890 and took the Victorian society by a storm. He exposed the middle class morality and the hypocrisy of the aristocratic upper class in his writings. For all the protest it created, Oscar wrote in his preface that “There is no such thing as moral or immoral book. Books are well written, or badly written. That is all.” The book cold be said to reflect much of his own life.

Born in an aristocratic family, studied at Dublin and Oxford, he was a leading figure in London. At Oxford he became a close friend of Frank Miles a painter, and the homosexual Lord Ronald Gower, both of whom are represented in Dorian Grey. He got involved with Lord Alfred Douglas and was tried on charges of homosexuality and was sentenced to two years of prison and hard labor for the crime of sodomy. He died in 1900 in a cheap hotel in Paris, penniless, at the early age of 46. On his death bed he seemed to have converted and become a Roman Catholic.

Dorian Grey lost his parents when very young and was raised by his grandfather, mother’s father. Grandfather never liked him much, because his daughter, Dorian’s mother, had run away with a commoner and married him against his wishes. After the death of his grandfather Dorian inherits his estate and the luxury surrounding it. The story opens with the painter Basil Hallward, painting Dorian, appreciating his beautiful visage. Dorian was not even conscious of his beauty, but the painter seizes it on the canvas. He meets Lord Henry at one of these painting sessions, who talks about the fatality of the physical beauty which will surely pass away as age caught up with him.

The painter adores and worships Dorian’s good looks, the unblemished youthfulness and innocence that were in his face. But Dorian takes a liking to Sir Henry and gets drawn to him like a moth to the flame, though Basil fears Henry will be a bad influence on Dorian. Henry’s philosophy in life was simple: “The only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it.” He further states that all the great sins in the world take shape in the mind alone, which we fear because of the false morality that is around us in the society. He would encourage a libertine view point of life, to enjoy life to the maximum, “to cure the soul by means of the senses.” These ideas trouble the innocent mind of Dorian and drag him away eventually to the path of evil.

As the picture was completed, Dorian gazes his own beauty with pleasure but was afraid that soon he would lose this youth and beauty but the portrait will always remain young. He wishes, if he could always be young and the picture can grow old. He says if this could happen at all, he could give his soul for such an arrangement. Looked like his wishes were granted!

Seizing the words of Lord Henry as that of the Bible, Dorian starts his life on the slippery path of enjoying his senses to the maximum. He goes to a cheap theatre only to fall in love with the young, beautiful and excellent leading actress, Sibyl, there. He promises her marriage without even disclosing his name or status, but one day when she was not up to the mark in acting he loses interest and breaks his engagement with her. Her brother going away as a sailor had warned her about such rich men for whom girls like her are playthings. But heartbroken as she was she commits suicide. Dorian on learning it was not all that heart-broken, but saw a slight change in the portrait. There were lines of cruelty around the mouth and it had a cruel smile, but his own face remained as ever without a change. It suddenly dawned on him that what he wished had come true - that the portrait grew old while he himself remained young.

This revelation pushed him further into immoral life. He almost led a double life, one shadowy and deceptive, another respectable and admirable. He was absent for long periods when he would indulge his passions in places of doubtful integrity before reappearing to the society as if nothing had happened. He left a trail of suicides and disappearances where ever he went and with whomever he was close and friendly. This led to rumors and gossips, but one look at his handsome face and aristocratic demeanor no one would believe that he could have done such horrible things.

After some time, his karma seemed to have caught up with him. In a dingy hovel where he had befriended a low class woman and indulged in drugs and sex, the sailor brother of Sibyl, his first love, seemed to have identified him and tried to kill him. Dorian was shattered. Though he escaped he was terrified. The painter friend Basil visits him and confronts him about the rumors he had heard about him. Dorian blames the painter for having painted that portrait of him and given him this soul-wish. He takes him to his secret room where he had kept the portrait and shows it to him. Basil was shocked to see how the painting had been ravaged; it had the eyes of a devil. It was the face of soul of Dorian. 

Basil wept and asked Dorian to kneel down and beg for God’s forgiveness. But Dorian in a fit of anger and hatred plunges the knife into Basil and kills him, as if it was all somehow his fault. He destroys the body and all evidences. The portrait has blood dripping from its hands now. The face of his avenger, the sailor haunted him. But by an accident even he dies, leaving Dorian absolutely free, with no evidence of his past horrible life, except the portrait itself. It showed every sin he committed and every crime he indulged in. It was the only witness and the only evidence to his past life. He decided to destroy the portrait itself so that he can rid of all traces of evidences to his past.

He stabbed the picture with the same knife he had stabbed its painter. The knife strike fell on Dorian and he fell down dead with a hideous cry of pain. When the servants crept to the room the next morning they saw a withered, wrinkled old man with a loathsome face lying dead with a knife to his heart. Nearby was the portrait of Dorian restored to its exquisite youth and beauty. Only from the ring he was wearing the servants were able to identify the dead man as their master, Dorian Grey.

What a story! In youthful innocence one gets lured into sinful path through unholy friendships and alliances. It led to his downfall. An unmarred visage gave impetus to an unruly existence which was not notices by others in the society. But finally he had to pay for his crimes and conscience has its own way of bedeviling a person who had committed a crime. It is difficult to wash off the bloodstains from a murderous hand. He could have repented, sought forgiveness of God, made a clean breast of all the sins he had committed and turned on a new leaf in his life. Christ could have saved his soul. But he was too self-centered and proud to do that. He was busy destroying all evidences of his past horrid life, and in the process he killed himself; much like Judas Iscariot killing himself after betraying Jesus.

A terrible lesson to the youth, not to be led by unsavory characters, and not to sell their souls for beauty or money or power or position; good character and moral life are any day preferable for these will give us a clear conscience and favor with our holy God and His Son who gave his life for us. Much like the portrait in this story, Jesus took the effects of the sins of the world on his body and died in our place so that we can go free. Dorian could have appropriated this provision of God for restoring his life. He missed it. Let it be a lesson to us, not to miss it, but to live by it.  


[1] Oscar Wilde, “The Picture of Dorian Grey,”  Projapathi, Kolkata, 2016

Monday, 6 August 2018

After Constantine what?



In the last blog we saw that though Constantine put an end to the persecution of Christianity and changed the policy of the Empire to that of toleration of Christianity by his Edict of Milan of 313 AD, he himself was not converted until his death bed. Till then he supported paganism, the worship of Greco-Roman gods and goddesses, and followed those rituals.

Well, the freedom from persecution and recognition of their religion by the Empire brought its own flip side. The church, its hierarchy soon started to imitate and emulate the Roman hierarchy of authority, its pomp and investments of the purple and its riches. Some unfaithful stewards of the church lavished the riches of the church on sensual pleasures, for private gain, fraudulent purchases and rapacious usury.

A decent portion of the tithes of the people was kept for the maintenance of the bishop and his clergy. A lot of it went in the expenses of the public worship, feasts of love, the agapae. A major portion of the collections went to the care of the poor, widows, orphans, the lame, the sick, and the aged of the community; to the care of strangers and pilgrims, prisoners and captives, and rescue of unwanted babies. The benevolence of the new religion was obvious and overwhelming. But we can say that the church has lost its internal purity and simplicity.

Constantine on defeating his rivals to power for the Roman Empire, Maxentius and Licinius, was left as the sole sovereign over the entire Roman Empire. He issued circular letters to all his subjects in 324 AD to emulate the Emperor and embrace the divine truth of Christianity. Labaram, a military standard with cross and the first two letters of the name Christ in Greek inscribed over it and the flag hung from this standard, became the regular standard of the Emperor and his successors as they went to war. Cross, the symbol of Christians came to be inscribed on the shields of all the soldiers of the Roman army.

With the patronage of the Emperor and the nobles, the common masses followed suit. Temples were erased and idols destroyed in towns, and privileges and rewards were extended to such municipalities. For every convert the Emperor presented a white garment and twenty pieces of gold. War and trade spread the new religion, which the Emperor of the most powerful nation had adopted, far and wide. Goths, Germanic tribes and other barbarians revered the standard of Rome carrying the cross. The church had 1800 bishops who held the spiritual and legal jurisdiction of their flock all over the Roman Empire. Quite a number! They were under the five patriarchs of the mighty church, stationed in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, Carthage and Constantine.

An Assembly of the church convened by the Emperor Constantine to settle the differences and heresies about the doctrine of Trinity at Nice in Bithynia in 325 AD saw 318 bishops attending. It lasted for two months, where the Nicene Creed was decided upon which our churches use even today. Constantine gave the church security, wealth and honors, but the internecine quarrels over questions of doctrine tore the church apart and persecution of some sects as heretic by the orthodox sect of the church replaced the persecution of the church by the State. Blood flowed in the name of Jesus Christ to settle disputes regarding the doctrinal aspects of His nature.

A peaceful religion which Christ preached, emphasizing self-sacrifice and humility, came to be one with cruelty, dispute and murder. A sad commentary of affairs, I should say, which started in the 4th century and continued through the turmoil of Protestantism in the 16th 17th centuries.

The next Emperor Julian, the son of Constantine, showed attachment to the gods of Athens and Rome and tried to reverse the flow of tide and to reinstall paganism. Very soon he returned to the former habit of persecution of the Christians with a vengeance. He encouraged the Jews by helping them to build their temple in Jerusalem. He passed laws that obliged the Christians to make good for the demolition of the temples which they did under the previous regime. Fortunately for the Christian Julian died in 363 AD while pursuing a war against Persia.

Jovian the next Emperor, restored the use of Labarum, abolished all the edicts of Julian which were against Christianity, restored the properties of the church and peace prevailed. In many cities temples were shut or deserted. Policy of encouragement of Christianity continued, but Arian controversy[1] still plagued the church resulting in killings and counter-killings.

Paganism, the worship of Greco-Roman gods was completely destroyed in the reign of emperor Theodosius in 375 AD. It took some 68 years from the conversion of Constantine for this to happen. Their honors and Privileges and financial support from public funds to the priesthood and the rituals were all withdrawn. The reigning deity’s statue and her altar of Victory in the Senate were removed. The adherents of pagan faith did fight back. They attributed the reversals that Roman Empire suffered in the wars, especially in the Western Roman Empire to the new religion of Christianity and to the anger of the discarded and offended gods of the Romans.

Nevertheless the gods of antiquity lost their charms. In a debate in the Senate whether the Romans should worship Jupiter or Christ, by a large majority vote Jupiter was condemned and degraded in AD 394. That small minority soon realized the changes in the times and got converted. The masses simply followed. The temples of the erstwhile Roman gods were abandoned, neglected and left to ruin. Superstitions were attacked; use of sacrifices was prohibited; Officers were directed to shut the temples, destroy the idols, and abolish the privileges of the priests and to confiscate the consecrated property of the temples. In many places bishops marched at the head of his faithful monks to destroy idols and temples and the consecrated trees. 
 
Christianity had won, but the superstitions of the Pagans still continued in one form or the other. They clandestinely continued their sacrifices and assemblies under the trees. These were all swept away by the last edict of Emperor Theodosius in 390 AD, which prohibited worship of an inanimate idol by sacrifice of a guiltless victim by any of his subjects. Such offences will be punishable by death, confiscation of property or a heavy fine of 24 pounds of gold. It was enforced by the emperors and their officers diligently, sounding the death-knell for paganism. Within 28 years of the death of Theodosius, pagan worship disappeared without a trace.

But churches were filled with increasing number of people who were not really converted in their hearts to the Lord Jesus Christ, but came in because of compulsion of the State and persecution. They brought in to Christianity the worship of saints and their relics and pilgrimage to the places of birth or death of these saints, and offerings of candles and flowers, all reminiscent of pagan worship. Who was the loser and who was the victor in this all consuming drama, God alone knows and it will become clearer to us on the last Day of Judgment.

One could see how closely the destiny of Christianity was related to the rise and decline of the Roman Empire itself. However the Roman Empire is long gone, but Christ is still ruling in the hearts of millions of people around the globe and influencing them every day in a big way.

Let His kingdom come! 
Let Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven!


[1] Arius, a Presbyter of a church in Alexandria, Egypt held that Christ, being a Son begotten by God, was subordinate to God and so he and his followers did not subscribe to Trinitarian doctrine of the Orthodox Church. Athanasius, also a bishop in Alexandria opposed Arius and argued for Trinity, three Beings in the God-head of the same substance and equal status. In Nicaea Assembly convened in 325 AD, Arianism was branded as a heresy. Still, after Constantine, many Emperors supported Arianism.

Tuesday, 24 July 2018

Christianity: Its origins and growth



It is an amazing story that Christianity that started as a sect in the remote corner of Palestine, should grow into a gigantic religious organization covering every part of the earth. How was it made possible? It is an interesting story. I would try and touch some very interesting points along its historical development.

Jesus of Nazareth was crucified and buried in and around 33 AD under the regime of the Governor Pontius Pilate over the Roman province of Judea and Herod the king of Judea, under the Roman Emperor Tiberius, who ruled from AD 26 to 36. That they were real historical persons have been affirmed from other writings of this period and also through archaeological surveys. The 11 disciples of Jesus were witnesses to his resurrection and in proclaiming his message died as martyrs in many countries, in Jerusalem, Rome, Ethiopia, India, Armenia and Greece.

For three hundred years after the death and rising of Jesus Christ, this religion, first thought as a sect of Judaism, but known among its followers as ‘the Way,’ was persecuted first by Jews and then by the Roman Emperors. Persecutions happened sporadically and in selected pockets within the Empire, during the regime of Emperors like Nero, Domitian, Valerian, Diocletian.

Persecution however failed to stop the growth of the church. Many perished in these persecutions, bishops were burnt, people were thrown to wild animals in the circuses and so on. The main reason for persecution was these Christians refused to sacrifice and worship Greco-Roman gods and goddesses and would not call Caesar as Lord. They recognized only Jesus as their Lord.

It is amazing that this religion which started among the poor and the powerless, the slaves and fishermen, grew to cover the Roman Empire within a short span of 300 years.

True, Apostle Paul took Christ’s teaching to the prominent cities of Roman Empire around the Mediterranean Sea, like Corinth, Athens, Ephesus, Philippi, Galatia, Caesarea, Neopolis, Miletus, Thessalonica, Berea and Antioch, in the region of Asia Minor, Macedonia, and Greece, laying the foundations for New Testament churches among the Jews and the Gentiles. Rome already had a church by Paul’s time.

But it caught like wild fire, with no arms, no ammunitions, no emperor promoting it. It stood only on the teachings of Jesus Christ, his selfless death to provide people a way to be reconciled to God and the simple and genuine life of the first generations of the Christians. The primitive church was formed within 40 days of Jesus’ crucifixion.   

Among the other reasons for such a rapid stride Gibbon[1] puts forth five important ones. 1. The zeal of early Christians which made them even welcome death but not defy their Lord Christ and how they refused to bow before any earthly or the then worshipped gods. But Christianity was universally offered to the slave, barbarian, the rich and the poor, men and women, in short to all. It was not an exclusive religion like Judaism, nor a polytheistic religion like that of the Romans’.

2. The hope of an afterlife which was clearly enunciated. With the promise of eternal life after death and immortality, the adherents had a motivation to live amidst tribulations of this world which they saw as passing away. Jesus had promised not to leave them orphans, but to send the Holy Spirit to indwell them, guide them and teach them in his physical absence. That was a great comfort which they could testify and experience in their earthly lives. Further hope was given in Jesus’ promise that he will come back again and take them to be with him, so that they can be together for eternity. That was something to hope for and eagerly await.

3. Miraculous powers attributed to the primitive church. The miracles which Jesus performed during is earthly life, were performed continually by the church, through the apostles, prophets and ministers. These miraculous powers which healed the sick, raised the dead, expelled the demons acted as conclusive proofs for the divine origin and continuance of the church. It affirmed the supernatural force, the Holy Spirit, behind the church.

4. The pure and austere morals of the Christians, which the primitive Christians demonstrated in their lives by being virtuous. They were definitely purer and with better morals than their contemporary adherents of the other. Marriage bed was given sanctity and they abhorred divorce. They were simple, told no lies, abided by their oaths, were conscientious in their work, and carried on service to the others in the community, in spite of their poverty of earthly means. 
 
5. The union and discipline of the Christian republic, the order among the churches, which gradually developed along the side of the Roman Empire. They had Bishops, Presbyters, and Deacons, the clergy and the laity. Discipline was upheld and submission and respect were given to the elders in the church and to those placed as their overseers. Difficult questions were resolved by Councils and Assemblies. Money was spent on looking after widows, orphans, the infirm, the sick and the aged. Pilgrims and strangers were welcomed in their centres. They were benevolent. 

These factors attracted people to Christianity and it spread ever so quickly like yeast fermenting the whole dough, and until one day suddenly the Roman Emperors saw the advantage of keeping these once abhorrent Christians on their side. An approximate calculation puts that 20% of the population of the Empire was Christian before the conversion of Constantine.

The Roman Emperor Constantine, the most powerful man on earth, converted to Christianity. That was a wonder of wonders. However his conversion did not take place in one day; it was gradual. He did not take the rite of baptism until he was on his death bed in 337 AD. Till the very last, he had his one leg in Christianity and the other in the older Greco-Roman religion. In 321 AD he published the edict permitting the solemn observance of Sunday. In 313 AD he issued the Edict of Milan, whereby Christians were permitted to worship their God in peace. Peace was restored to the church.

But the problems of the church were not over. Those who came after Constantine tired to root our Christianity and re-establish the Greco-Roman religion of the people.

Did it succeed or did it fail? The vicissitudes of these times is another story to tell.

You may have to wait for the next blog for details of that story!  


[1] Edward Gibbon, “The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire,” Abridged version, 2003

Sunday, 15 July 2018

Family Outings and Niagara Falls!


                                            Our host, Mr. Prasad and  family

For the last leg of our trip, we went to Canada, where my sister-in-law’s brother’s family stays and had graciously invited all of us for two week’s holiday. This was the most enjoyable of all the visits during this trip, for they really took good care of us. We stayed in their beautiful house, the hostess got up early to cook delicious south Indian breakfasts, each day a different dish, and treated us with sumptuous lunches and dinners.

   Three families together-Mr. Raja and his wife Rajini also joined

In the mornings the lady of the house and one of her two lovely children will take us for shopping and in the evenings the husband returns from the office to either spend time with us at home chatting or take us out to see nearby places, parks and falls. Weekends the whole family along with two more families of relatives will all troop out to distant places and enjoy the company of each other and the wonderful places we visited. So this blog is going to be only about that, the family outings!

 
Four Families at birthday party at another brother, Mr. Balan's place













  The beautiful house of Mr. Prasad where we         stayed



As the flight came closer to Ottawa, the capitol of Canada, and as we descended one saw plenty of water bodies, strewn like blue jewels on the landscape. I wondered whether these are all left over waters of the sea for the Atlantic Ocean has made many a deep fissures into the land. But I was pleasantly surprised to know that these are all fresh water bodies, not to mention Lake Superior and Lake Ontario, both of which looked like sea! It was as if contrary to the exclamation of the Ancient Mariner “water, water everywhere, Nor any drop to drink,” one could say “water, water everywhere, all well suited to drink!”
                                                                                      
                                                                                    Paul Chomedey's statue in Place                                                                                                            d'Armes
     Notre Dame Basilica














One week end we went to Montreal, Quebec, in the French speaking part of Canada, and visited the amazing Notre Dame Basilica. The Basilica was started in 1672 as a small parish church built when the town was founded. It was built on a grand scale in 1824 which got completed only in 1843. It is built in Gothic Revival style, with vaults beautifully colored deep blue, and decorated in blue, reds, purples, silver and gold. Intricate wooden carvings adorn the walls and notches, along with stained glass windows. Day time when we visited a wedding was going on and we gawked at and took pictures of the groom and the bride arriving in bridal dress, as if it was our own family wedding!
                                                                                                        "Aura" inside the                                                                                                                         Basilica

In the night we attended the breathtaking programme “Aura,” a light show with laser beams illuminating all parts of the inside of the Basilica in beautiful colours. It was splendid to watch. We hung around the church, in the Place d’Armes, the central city square and the monument of the founder of the city Paul Chomedey de Maisonneuve right in the centre of the square and the other buildings. During the day we visited the Insectarium and the Japanese Garden and took innumerable pictures amidst the beautiful flowers and other sights.

                                                                                
                                                                                               The boat club
One evening we went to the Britannia Beach in Ottawa, Andrew Hayden Park with a boat club, Hogback Falls, and Mooney Bay Park. Though not a regular beach, the waters of the lake are so expanse that waves have formed and sand is pushed on the coast. The boat club had innumerable boats and they were just setting sail and it was a wonderful sight to behold.

       Britannia Beach                                                     Hog Back Falls









Canadian Geese and family!
Everywhere we went we were greeted with many Canadian Geese, with their young ones, busy pecking at the grass. I think it is their breeding season. The parks are all so well maintained with manicured lawns, meticulously kept clean, fresh and beautiful. To get a falls right in the middle of a busy city is enervating, but Hogs back falls was right there and extended as the Mooney Bay Park. The two kids, who were with us, enjoyed the outing as much as the adults and we all had a wonderful time.


In Meadow Breeze Park

Every day morning my brother and me would go for walk in the park next to their home known as Meadow Breeze park, and walk around the small lake that was there, chasing the hare, black squirrels, sea gulls, cormorants, and the Canadian Geese families, which either visited the lake or made their home there. We used to sit in the gazebo in the park and chat for a long while before returning home for a very nice and hot breakfast. It was a wonderful routine which we could follow almost to the end.  

                                                                                                                Parliament Building




One evening we went to the Parliament house and the buildings around. Having worked in government, I was amazed to see hardly any security arrangements worth the name. Everyone was free to wander about. The central massive building sported a Peace Tower with a clock Tower, in the Centre Block of the Canadian Parliamentary building. It houses the House of Commons, Senate Chambers and many offices. 

   Sunset near Rideau Canal
The Rideau Canal running nearby is an amazing structure built in 1832, connecting the Ottawa city and the Lake Ontario, of 202 km in length. When India was rapidly sinking into the bondage of British rule, with Sepoy Mutiny just 25 years away, a poor and exhausted civilization, these young nations in the newly found lands were building canals using far superior technology unimaginable in India of those times. Bravo! Not for nothing did they rule the world for hundreds of years!


The last week end was eventful and mesmerizing. We packed and left for Oshawa, a city in Ontario, where the daughter of our host family was graduating from University of Ontario Institute of Technology. The parents were there for the graduation ceremony and then we all left to visit Toronto Canadian National Tower, CN Tower for short. The Tower is a major tourist attraction in Toronto, the financial district of the province Ontario.

         CN Tower                                                                     View from Glass ceiling in                                                                                                         CN Tower


 Ontario island airport - flight landing


It is 555.5 meters high, a concrete communication and observation tower built in 1976. We went up its 150th floor and had a spectacular panoramic view of the Toronto city and the beautiful surroundings. We noticed the Toronto Island and the island airport and filmed as a plane approached the airport, landed and then took off in the air over the Ontario Lake. Fabulous! We stood on the all glass floor and were able to locate the trams and cars going down below in the streets and a stadium. It was similar to the glass floor we experienced in Freedom Tower in New York City. 


Dinosaur Park-fire belching animals!
 The next day we went for the final haul, the breathtaking Niagara Falls. I had seen Niagara Falls from USA side with my son in 2004, but to see it from Canadian side was a mesmerising experience. We walked though Dinosaur Park with animals belching fire, bought some souvenirs, had some tea, stocking up energy to see the Falls in all its might. We went by a boat up to the very centre of the Horseshoe Fall wearing red rain coats, but as we approached the falls the mist and spray were so much that we completely got drenched. We screamed with delight like little children!

      The group on Canadian cruise 
One could see the American falls and also the Bridal Falls on the American side. Boats were going from there too, with people wearing blue rain coats! The Niagara Falls is situated on the border of Ontario on Canada side and Buffalo district on American side. The Niagara River drains the waters from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario. The cascading waters aare used to generate electricity and it falls at its vertical best 50 meters.

        Horse shoe Falls in color                                                   Fire works










As the night approached our excitement and expectations grew. It was almost palpable. Suddenly the waters were lit up by colors, the cascading waters taking the hue of orange, red, blue, pink, violet and so on. It was beautiful beyond description. The magic of the moment
                                              Cascading waters



could only be experienced. By 10 pm fireworks started to adorn the sky and we had a visual treat to the eyes and slowly without wanting to, tear ourselves away from the falls to have dinner and then go back home. It was altogether a wonderful and a once in a life time experience.

        Cruise in 1000 Islands
After rest and recuperation, the next day we went for the last of the visits, the 1000 Islands in a cruise boat. It was serene and thrilling at the same time to sail around the islands watching all the beautiful homes, trees and other boats. I learnt that a piece of land surrounded by waters had to have at least two trees to be called an island! There were some which just couldn’t make it to the list! 

All things, even good tours have to end and we also had to return home after three long weeks. We bid good bye to our host family at the airport and boarded the flight with a very satisfied and happy faces and hearts, thanks to our relatives and families who gave us a wonderful and delightful holiday.

And a big thank you to our Lord Jesus Christ, for giving us this enjoyable holiday and a safe trip. Thank you Lord and bless every one who made it so thoroughly enjoyable to us.